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101
May 11, 2016
05/16
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 101
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joe: another trend we are seeing is a rise of multigenerational leveling.onomic forces behind that fact? would pointe people to a demographic shift in terms of foreign nationals. you more for nationals living in the u.s. what is more important is that you have got a wave of downsizing and if you think about it, a mother-in-law or father-in-law going to live with you is actually a form of downsizing for them. another way to think about it is you have had difficulty for young folks to get a job. when they come back and live, that is another generation coming into the household that you thought you are free of. but it is really i think, a function of the parents of the baby boomers moving back which is a form of downsizing. joe: one of the things we have written about is how tout care costs are surging in a lot of cities, multigenerational families could help deal with that. is that a force year to you think? task force here do you think? think?e here do you stephen: they have indicated they believe it is the responsibility of the parents to give something bac
joe: another trend we are seeing is a rise of multigenerational leveling.onomic forces behind that fact? would pointe people to a demographic shift in terms of foreign nationals. you more for nationals living in the u.s. what is more important is that you have got a wave of downsizing and if you think about it, a mother-in-law or father-in-law going to live with you is actually a form of downsizing for them. another way to think about it is you have had difficulty for young folks to get a job....
138
138
May 15, 2016
05/16
by
KPIX
tv
eye 138
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we see them for multigenerations. we see people at their lowest times and we see people at their most joyous times. and the fact that those people live their lives as part of the congregation means they can bring their full self, that is so important to us. somebody goes to a psychiatrist or psychologist, we're not replicating any of those services that they can get elsewhere, but to acknowledge we are there to support them in other ways. so for example, we're there to support their entire family. often, or we know that mental illness affects the entire family or community beyond the individual. and so we're there to support the family and also to be with them not only around crisis or issues around the mental illness, but also a full life. so somebody who is experiencing a mental illness and goes to their therapist on friday, sunday they will come with their child to sunday school and wednesday they are going to come to our homeless shelter and make food for people. so we can really be there to support the whole fami
we see them for multigenerations. we see people at their lowest times and we see people at their most joyous times. and the fact that those people live their lives as part of the congregation means they can bring their full self, that is so important to us. somebody goes to a psychiatrist or psychologist, we're not replicating any of those services that they can get elsewhere, but to acknowledge we are there to support them in other ways. so for example, we're there to support their entire...
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206
May 8, 2016
05/16
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 206
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[applause] >> for -- hello everyone, i have been working on a multigenerational book project that is taken me many years. in researching this product i came across this controversy. a 25 page chapter grew into a 99 page chapter. book.ded to write a's all the book is called think or died. that is what i am going to talk about today. when we are done, i look forward to a lively conversation. in 1949, the poet was in a really odd position. award just been given an for the highest achievement in poetry. it was the highest prize at that time. he happened to be in an insane asylum for treason for his anti-democracy speeches over the radio in italy. agencye one government who want to honor him as a great poet. then you have another government agency who wanted to hang him for treason. sparked one of the worst literary conferences -- controversies in history. it reflected cultural alignments that were in flux. both conservatives and liberals were prompted to reconsider their presumptions in order to avoid the catastrophes they had witnessed. spanned the political spectrum. looking at this co
[applause] >> for -- hello everyone, i have been working on a multigenerational book project that is taken me many years. in researching this product i came across this controversy. a 25 page chapter grew into a 99 page chapter. book.ded to write a's all the book is called think or died. that is what i am going to talk about today. when we are done, i look forward to a lively conversation. in 1949, the poet was in a really odd position. award just been given an for the highest achievement...
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124
May 10, 2016
05/16
by
CNNW
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eye 124
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we're a multigenerational, multiethnic revolution of the gospel of jesus christ.aid nothing during the civil rights movement, when you had literally down the road from that church little girls being blown apart by terrorists in this country and the church had nothing to say about issues of racial justice and then later, when the church tried to rooech african american people in the community, they found the community didn't want to hear from them and rightly so because they said when you had the opportunity to speak up, you said nothing. i think we're in a similar moment right now when we see the race baiting and the misogyny we've seen all of this year. if you have people not willing to say the things we have said about decency and morality, that applies to everyone, not just our political opponents, we don't have credibility left for the future. >> do you hear that debate? >> i hear some of that for sure. the bottom line is donald trump has work to do as it relates to mobilizing those grass roots, evangelical voters who are the ones on the ground doing the dirty
we're a multigenerational, multiethnic revolution of the gospel of jesus christ.aid nothing during the civil rights movement, when you had literally down the road from that church little girls being blown apart by terrorists in this country and the church had nothing to say about issues of racial justice and then later, when the church tried to rooech african american people in the community, they found the community didn't want to hear from them and rightly so because they said when you had...
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89
May 8, 2016
05/16
by
CNNW
tv
eye 89
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goldwater got defeated badly all of the pundits were saying this is it, the republican party is multigenerationald four years later, nixon gets elected in '68. rpg go on to win five of the next six presidential elections and democrats, 84, people say the democrats are doomed and eight year later, you have a modernizer in bill clinton, who turns the party around and ushers in an area of governance. parties can bounce back. >> will the republican party of the future be as emily is suggesting a more trumplike party, populist, nationalist, protectionist and slightly xenophobic? >> i would say that it is very likely that the publican party of the future if it is a majority party will learn something important from trump and my hope is that it learns something about the importance of recognizinged economic anxieties of ddle america and if it doesn't learn something about the usefulness of talking about mexican rapists and banning all muslims and that's an open question. look, we're in an age where nationalism is resurgent and this is true in europe and it's true now in north america and it's true for u
goldwater got defeated badly all of the pundits were saying this is it, the republican party is multigenerationald four years later, nixon gets elected in '68. rpg go on to win five of the next six presidential elections and democrats, 84, people say the democrats are doomed and eight year later, you have a modernizer in bill clinton, who turns the party around and ushers in an area of governance. parties can bounce back. >> will the republican party of the future be as emily is...
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56
May 1, 2016
05/16
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 56
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. >> you're saying this happened in the 1920s it's a multigenerational, your people and families on the border and the only thing that is changed in regard to smuggling is what items are being smuggled. today it could be duffel bags of marijuana but back then it was pots of booze. >> yes. the thing is nothing is illegal until a law makes it illegal. before that is just trade. so what so what happens is the first illicit trade on the border worse people trying to save money on trade taxes and that was a dominant form of smuggling in the 19th century because the government got the majority of their revenue from trade taxes. so today the government gets from sellers and income tax back then it was trade taxes. those trade taxes come down in the early 20th century and you see smuggling evolve in that. because no longer can the government focus -- they get most the money on income tax so it evolves from being an economic security agency because they work for the treasury department to be in a border security agency trying to prevent the movement of prohibited items, not items that are taxabl
. >> you're saying this happened in the 1920s it's a multigenerational, your people and families on the border and the only thing that is changed in regard to smuggling is what items are being smuggled. today it could be duffel bags of marijuana but back then it was pots of booze. >> yes. the thing is nothing is illegal until a law makes it illegal. before that is just trade. so what so what happens is the first illicit trade on the border worse people trying to save money on trade...
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94
May 31, 2016
05/16
by
CNNW
tv
eye 94
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. ♪ >> anthony: over a century ago, provincetown was a hard-working fishing village with multigenerational my father fished, and i was pretty much raised here my whole life. where i am from, it's who i am. but it used to be like two out of three families in this town, this community, were fishing families. most of them are now gone. and we're really like a minority. used to be a fishing community with a homosexual problem. now it's a homosexual community with a fishing problem. >> anthony: the first portuguese fishermen arrived here in 1840. the main families created a community built around fishing, and this town lived off that industry well into the 20th century. it persisted even when i was here, keeping up old catholic fishing traditions like the blessing of fleet. these days however, there are fewer and fewer boats to bless. >> scott: my name's scott roe, i'm a commercial fishermen. sea scallops, fourth generation. i started when i was 5. it was cool back then. there was like 70, 80 boats here, they were five or six feet deep. now it's just down to like 7 or 8. i'm wicked proud of my
. ♪ >> anthony: over a century ago, provincetown was a hard-working fishing village with multigenerational my father fished, and i was pretty much raised here my whole life. where i am from, it's who i am. but it used to be like two out of three families in this town, this community, were fishing families. most of them are now gone. and we're really like a minority. used to be a fishing community with a homosexual problem. now it's a homosexual community with a fishing problem. >>...
112
112
May 11, 2016
05/16
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 112
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in new mexico, we have seen a crisis that is multigenerational. people growing up in communities where abuse is a commonplace. the grant program for residential treatment that my bill enhances is an important part of our effort to break the cycle of drug abuse that grips our communities. my bill would also increase funding for the pregnant and postpartum women grant. as originally written, my bill contains an authorization of $40 million significantly above the current level to avoid any cuts to existing residential programs. it's through bipartisan cooperation we arrived at a small increase over the next five years. by focusing on women with young children and soon-to-be mothers we help ensure these mothers get on the right path from the very beginning. people want to be better, but unfortunately too often there are too few resources and avenues for help. certainly this is true in new mexico which is among the states' most impacted by the epidemic plaguing our country. too many people are suffering, and too many people are being shut out from acc
in new mexico, we have seen a crisis that is multigenerational. people growing up in communities where abuse is a commonplace. the grant program for residential treatment that my bill enhances is an important part of our effort to break the cycle of drug abuse that grips our communities. my bill would also increase funding for the pregnant and postpartum women grant. as originally written, my bill contains an authorization of $40 million significantly above the current level to avoid any cuts...